A plan to rebuild part of the Yuanmingyuan (the old Summer Palace) Park has
met with mixed public response.
The park's management office said it is planning to rebuild a
palace gate before the end of this year.
Yuanmingyuan
ruinsĀ [File photo]
Zong Tianliang, spokesman for the office, said the project will
take a year to complete and will be "a loyal copy of the original
gate".
But many fear construction of the gate might destroy some the
historic remains.
Yuanmingyuan is regarded as a symbol to remind Chinese people of
the shameful history of the 19th century when China was bullied by
Western countries.
What visitors see in the park today is mostly the ruins left
from a fire that the British and French troops set after plundering
countless treasures from the royal garden in 1860.
More than half of the 2,300 netizens who responded to a poll on
sina.com on Monday were against the rebuilding project.
About 54 percent agreed that rebuilding the gate would destroy
some historical relics, and protecting what "remains is the best
solution".
"Yuanmingyuan as it stands today is the best material for
patriotic education. Rebuilding will not only cost money, but also
probably make people forget part of history," a netizen said.
However, 44 percent agreed it was necessary to restore the
exquisite imperial garden to its former glory, described as a
masterpiece in Chinese classical garden art.
Researchers said the Yuanmingyuan, a general name for three
royal gardens built and expanded in Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), used
to cover nearly 350 hectares and consisted of 100 buildings of
different styles, including European and southern China.
"Rebuilding part of the garden and showing visitors the
comparison can also educate people," another netizen said.
Zong said the rebuilding is part of the Yuanmingyuan Ruins
Planning project, which was approved by the municipal government
and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage in 2000.
The planning agreed to rebuild no more than 10 percent of the
original royal garden.
Currently the park has only three rebuilt structures - a
European-style maze, a pavilion and the palace gate of
Qichunyuan.
Some experts have said that a rebuilt Yuanmingyuan would still
be incomplete without all its lost treasures. A bronze horse head
looted from the garden was recently sold for US$8.84 million and
returned to China.
(China Daily September 25, 2007)